COP29: Tinubu approves climate accountability portal

....cuts expenditure by N10 billion

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President Bola Tinubu has authorised the establishment of a Climate Accountability and Transparency Portal and other measures to ensure efficiency and accountability in the nation’s participation at the 29th UN Climate Change Conference (COP 29) in Baku, Azerbaijan, from November 11 to 22.

The Special Presidential Envoy on Climate Action, Ajuri Ngelale, announced this while addressing reporters at the State House on Tuesday in Abuja on Nigeria’s preparation for the forthcoming climate conference.

He also announced that the government would strictly implement cost-saving measures that would save the nation nearly ₦10 billion during COP 29, relative to expenditures made during COP 28 in Dubai last year.

A statement last night by the Director of Information and Public Relations in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF), Segun Imohiosen, reads: “President Bola Tinubu is fully aware of and sensitive to the economic conditions confronting our people and, as a result, he approved an audit of the expenditure profile of last year’s COP 28 climate conference. While there was deliberate misinformation regarding the delegation size, our investigation clearly identified inefficiencies that required immediate remedies.

“The President had approved that the Office of the Special Presidential Envoy on Climate Action, in collaboration with the National Council on Climate Change, establish the Climate Accountability and Transparency Portal (CAT-P) as a tool for every Nigerian to verify the number of delegates attending COP 29 later this year.

“This will, among other things, ensure that all members of the delegation across ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) at the federal and state levels, as well as the legislative branch of government, are captured on a transparent portal. Nigerians will have full-and-real-time access into the data concerning who is attending and those the government is sponsoring to COP 29.”

Ngelale explained that there were concerns about the size of Nigeria’s delegation and the associated expenditures during COP 28 in Dubai.

He said in response to the development, President Tinubu authorised an audit to fully understand and ascertain what happened and what must be done to ensure that such inefficiencies were not repeated.

According to him, the audit revealed significant wasteful expenditures at COP 28, including nearly $500,000 spent on a showcase pavilion, in addition to a number of wasteful sub-contracts and consultancies, among many other avoidable expenses.

“This review and resolution process is conducted with a view to ensuring that whatever is spent ahead of COP 29 has a function that will lead to the economic empowerment of our people and the economic development of our nation.

“Additionally, this will also ensure that anyone who is attending this conference has an economic imperative to be at that conference, engaging with companies, multilateral partners and stakeholders who will attract finance and opportunity into the country for the benefit of our people.

“Anyone who is not engaging in activities that are directly linked to the attraction of climate engagement, business opportunity, and ushering new finance into the country will not be part of the federal government’s delegation this time around,” Ngelale said.